. Bird-lore . plant acopse in some quiet corner. Allof these shrubs are distinctlyornamental the year round, andcan be used in place of ordinaryshrubs that have no attractionafter the flowers have faded. No. s- Japanese Silver Thorn. The birds andthe are both fond f the berries. Exceedingly No. 2. Japanese Dogwood. Ilowers as con-spicuous as our native dogwood. No. 5. Arrowwood. Sure to be on the birdsfail bill of fare. No. 4. Chinese Christmas Berry. As spark-ling as the eyes of the birds liiey attract. 50 plants (our assortment), 1/2 feet high, $10; 100 plants $19 The above prices


. Bird-lore . plant acopse in some quiet corner. Allof these shrubs are distinctlyornamental the year round, andcan be used in place of ordinaryshrubs that have no attractionafter the flowers have faded. No. s- Japanese Silver Thorn. The birds andthe are both fond f the berries. Exceedingly No. 2. Japanese Dogwood. Ilowers as con-spicuous as our native dogwood. No. 5. Arrowwood. Sure to be on the birdsfail bill of fare. No. 4. Chinese Christmas Berry. As spark-ling as the eyes of the birds liiey attract. 50 plants (our assortment), 1/2 feet high, $10; 100 plants $19 The above prices are for Bird-Lore readers only FLOWERING TREES AND SHRUBS. .other Hiciis Monograph for all who love the usual and .irc inlin-tid in iIk- unn-ual llowerinK shrubs an 1 frees. Sent free on request No. 0. High Bush Cranberry. showy all 7. Black Alder. The birds can see thi-; a gootl ways 8. Bush Honeysuckle. Watch the birds feast on them in .Xu^ust. HICKS NURSERIES Westbury, New York. 1. BLUE JAY i. GRHliN JAY(About one-third natural size) 2. SrBLLKRS JAY 2?irb=lLore A BI-MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THE STUDY AND PROTECTION OF BIRDS Official Organ of The Audubon Societies Vol. XXI May—June, 1919 No. 3 The Warblers of Central New York* By A. A. ALLEN, , Assistant Professor of Ornithology, Cornell UniversityWith Photographs by the Author THERE are thirty-nine species ofWarblers that breed in easternNorth America, Of course, onecould not expect to find all that numbernesting in one place for some are charac-teristic of the south and others of thenorth. The largest number are found inthe intermediate regions, and are aboutequally divided between the Canadianand Transition life-zones. Here, in cen-tral New York, we are located in theTransition Zone, but a few of the typi-cally Austral Warblers work their waythis far north and a number of Cana-dian species remain this far south onthe tops of the higher hills and in thedeeper ravines. Within the CayugaLake basin


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